Tag: mental illness and work

Being on Social Security Disability Insurance at the age of 37 was not the path in life I hoped for. Like most people I was raised to respect and honor the value of paid employment. During the summers I mowed lawns, worked on my uncle’s farm, and occasionally delivered newspapers even in grade school. I accepted my first “real job” working as a cook at McDonalds the summer before my junior year of high school. My brother had worked there for a few years so they hired me. I was fired a few weeks later because I couldn’t work fast enough to satisfy their needs. I was even yelled at by the owner my first day on the job because I wasn’t working fast enough. That was my introduction to the work world.

Over the course of the next several years I worked in retail stores and went to school. By this time my mental illness was taking effect. Some days I’d get panic attacks so bad I’d vomit before I went into work. I was on edge at work except for when I was working alone or in a small group. I just couldn’t work with the public without feeling terrible anxiety. Because of this anxiety I would frequently make mistakes at my jobs and get yelled at by coworkers and customers. This only made the anxiety worse as the months and years went by. Not being able to deal with the public essentially killed any chance I had at a career as most jobs are now service related. I really had no aptitude for working with my hands so I never considered trade school.

When I was twenty five, after I washed out of the masters’ program in college, I got a job working in a factory. It was simple enough work that I didn’t really have to think about it. But it was an overnight shift job and over the course of several weeks I couldn’t adapt to sleeping in the day. Within a few weeks my work was suffering because I couldn’t sleep. Once again problems with coworkers rose up. One night when I made a mistake one of my coworkers threatened to kill me. I made up an excuse that I was sick and walked off the job that night. I never reported the incident because I feared management wouldn’t take me seriously. It has been my experience over the course of most of my life that no one took my problems seriously. To this day I still don’t talk about my problems until they become major issues.

I actually liked what I was doing at the factory. I even liked when I was doing janitorial work for the county government. In my county job I worked alone for the first two and a half years I was there. And I loved it. I could do my work, not deal with coworker drama, and I had my weekends off. It was the perfect job for me. But I was too good at that job. I got promoted, moved to the courthouse, and was on a staff of a handful of janitors. It went well for awhile until we hired some people who didn’t want to do good work and wanted to start drama. I never understood why people always wanted to start drama at a job. We were there to accomplish a job and make money, nothing more and nothing less. But some people just aren’t content unless they are causing problems for others. My coworkers at the factory got on me because my work was suffering because I couldn’t sleep well during the day. My request to go to day shift was denied so I quit. I could already feel mental health problems building and I knew it was only a matter of time before I had a full breakdown. As it was a few months later I went to the mental hospital.

My only real complaints about work was dealing with the drama of coworkers and dealing with customers who thought they could treat me like dirt because I was making minimum wage. It must make some people feel important treating small people poorly. I wouldn’t know. I could do just fine when I was working alone and only had to see my boss once or twice a day. As long as the work was done I had no complaints or issues. For me working alone is the best kind of job. I think it runs in my family. My father was self employed, one grandfather was a farmer and another was self employed. I just hate dealing with office politics and needless drama. And of course those are the staples of most modern workplaces. I couldn’t figure it out. But then I never could figure out why normal people act the way they do. I can’t figure out why it’s too tough for some of you to just attempt to put differences aside and compromise. I certainly can’t figure out why my culture praises ignorance and belligerence. I am not ignorant and I have never respected ignorant people. And I never will.

If I were to ever get back into the workplace it would be where I worked alone and didn’t deal with other people’s drama. I could see doing a work from home job over telecommuting. I have a friend and a cousin who do such work already. Many office jobs can already be done this way even today. But I know that some people don’t want to give up the office environment or give that much freedom to their workers. Personally I’d love to telecommute. I never understood the appeal of fighting traffic everyday to deal with people whose motives I can only guess just to do a job and get paid. I know in the past I have said I never want to work again. I should say that I don’t want to do any type of the work I have done in the past. I don’t want to work retail and deal with unruly coworkers and customers. I don’t want to work in an office and fight office politics. I don’t want to work in manufacturing that is set up to wash out people who don’t toe the line exactly. But that’s what my experience is in, even though I was never good at it. I probably couldn’t make a career out of any of these jobs because many of those jobs are going to get automated within the next ten to twenty years. My only real possibility of returning to work is doing alone work that allows me to use creativity, kind of like what I do with this blog. Maybe I should become a professional ghost writer.

Fall is here. The leaves are turning, the nights are getting longer, and the weather is cooling. Had to run my heater the last few nights. I do enjoy this time of year. It’s been several days since I last wrote. Updates are in order.

I haven’t had much to report the last few days because I have been feeling quite stable since my last breakdown a couple weeks ago. I now make a point to leave my apartment at least once a day. I usually buy groceries for two weeks at a time. Since winter is only a couple months away, I’ll have to start restocking my cold weather supplies soon. I haven’t been to my therapist for a few months simply because I really don’t have much to talk about with him. At this point in my illness, I really don’t have much of a desire to be social to strangers. I don’t really desire to leave my apartment much after dark, not because I live in a bad neighborhood, but because I don’t like driving at night anymore. It’s been a couple years since I went to the movie theatre as it seems that half of what’s shown anymore are remakes I saw the first time in my youth. If I want to watch something anymore, I just go to youtube or netflix. If I want to socialize I just call up my friends and family on the smart phone. I still avoid Facebook some as some people still can be quite nasty to each other over the pettiest differences of opinions. But I’d rather people be jerks to each other online than in person. I think one of the problems is that much can be lost in translation just with written text. I have thought about starting a youtube channel and doing a podcast through that as I think some of what I write can be lost in the reading.

I don’t mind not socializing much at this point in my life. I have always been an introvert who preferred having a few truly loyal friends and family members as opposed to having lots of casual friends. In my family, it seems that people are either extreme extroverts or extreme introverts. But sometimes I am my favorite company. I don’t mind going entire days without talking to people. I do like technology enough that I’m not going to be a modern Henry David Theorau and build a cabin on a lake and retreat from civilization. It can be tough being an introvert in a place and time that values “people person” types and extroversion. I have gotten in lots of trouble over the years for trying to keep to myself and just do my tasks at almost every job I ever had. It just isn’t enough to do the job and do it well anymore. But I know in previous eras I wouldn’t have had a job, I’d be in a mental asylum and probably would have had a short and chaotic life. It would have been much rougher in the past for someone like me. That’s why I’m not nostalgic.

Even though mental illness has cost me any potential career, wealth, or family, I am still quite happy overall most of the time. I would say that age 37 I’m far happier and content now than I was 10 years ago. I have come to the acceptance that I don’t need a career to validate my life and existence. That is something most people in modern civilization never come to realize. I still get the questions of ‘what do I do for a living’ all the time when I’m out in public. Anymore I just tell people I do online computer stuff from home, which isn’t a lie. I just don’t get paid for it. For years I lied to people about what kind of job I had. And I felt guilty about it because the very question seemed to imply that I had to validate my existence by what I did for several hours a day. What does it matter what I do all day as long as I’m not breaking the law or hurting other people? I know some exceptionally brilliant people who more or less dropped out of modern society because they saw the whole idea of a 40 hour work week and family and house in the suburbs as self defeating and pointless. I mean I don’t need to have a job paying me six figures when, as a minimalist, I can live comfortably off less than 20 grand a year. Besides, with soon to be eight billion plus people living on our small planet, we’re going to have to learn how to do more with less anyway.

What does it matter what a person does for a living in many cases anyway? There are studies out there and can be viewed online that state that as many as 50 percent of current jobs could be assigned to machines and done better within the next 20 years. When this happens, and it will happen despite political interventions and social upheavals, we as humans will have to find new ways to define ourselves outside of paid employment.

And I can’t figure out why people are so scared senseless of having their jobs assigned to machines. Practically everyone I know hates their jobs. I have heard that old “Oh God It’s Monday” and “Thank God It’s Friday” nonsense since I was five years old. Seems to me that griping and moaning about how much your job sucks is as American as baseball. If I were a business owner, I think I’d install machines just so I have to deal with as few bad attitudes as possible. Most jobs are in the service sector anymore that don’t pay as well as the old unionized factory jobs. And most people that work in these sectors are treated poorly by bosses, customers, and even fellow employees. I will never voluntarily work in customer service ever again. I have enough problems of my own to be working maximum hours for little to no benefits while taking abuse from customers and bosses. The way normal people treat customer service employees is really heartless and uncivilized. I don’t understand why anyone would put themselves through that except for the need for money. And I don’t need the money, so I won’t put myself through it.

Seems to me that we are running out of low skill jobs while many high skill jobs like doctors, engineers, teachers, trades jobs, technicians, etc. are going unfilled. Our schools, for whatever reasons, simply aren’t producing the quantities of people that are needed to keep our high tech civilizations functioning and advancing. That concerns me. We know my country doesn’t do a good job teaching science or math in our grade and secondary schools. We have known this for over 40 years now. And nobody seems interested in updating the American school systems for the high tech realities of modern times. Our civilization cannot afford another 40 years of poor science and math education. Why aren’t we making the changes?

Yes, our schools served us well in the industrial revolution. But they are a poor design for the information revolutions we have been in for at least the last 30 years. Then again, with as fast as things are advancing, much of what an 18 year college freshman learns will be pointless and obsolete by the time he/she graduates from college four to five years later. So we may have to teach kids to learn how to learn rather than give them certain facts and expect them to spit them out on a test only to be forgotten a week later. I would love to see some kid write on her high school tests, “Why should I clutter my mind with facts I can look up on Google?” That kind of testing seemed pointless to me as a teenager and it seems even more pointless now in 2017. Fortunately for older people like me there are mediums like youtube, khan academy, free online course through places like MIT, etc. that are keeping us more informed than we would have been in previous generations. Used to be that a person could rote learn facts and then spend the next 30 years working on a farm or in a factory simply because the science and tech didn’t advance very fast. Of course many people didn’t live past age 50 either, so retirement and the diseases of old age like heart disease and cancer weren’t very big problems. Those days are as dead and gone as the draft horse and wagon.

Unfortunately many people of my generation and the previous generations made the mistake of ending their education once their school years were over. This we could afford when science and tech weren’t advancing really fast and people weren’t regularly living into their 80s and 90s. But as fast as things are advancing now, it’s hurting us that our citizens and elected leaders aren’t able to keep up with the advances. I doubt most people in my government even understand that robotics, computer programs, and AI are getting good enough that many jobs will be disappearing within the next decade or two. My politicians are talking about bringing back old style manufacturing jobs. As good as automation is, that’s not happening. The U.S. is already the number two manufacturer in the world, behind only China. Even China is automating much of it’s manufacturing now. And when 3D printers get really good and easy to use, that’s going to end even more manufacturing jobs and retail jobs. When I get a good 3D printer someday, I will never set foot in a Wal Mart or mall ever again. As it already is, I do most of my shopping online. I even get delivery pizza and deli online anymore.

I don’t even have to go back to school to learn new things, thanks to online learning. For all I know, our grandkids’ generation may be able to have all their education online without having to set foot in a classroom. I’ve already learned as much online through five years of rigorous study on youtube and khan academy as I ever did in my years of formal education. And I absolutely love it. Maybe one of the reasons I’m not scared of the avalanche of changes our civilization is and will be facing in the next couple generations is because I have had to reinvent myself several times because of mental illness. We as a civilization will have to reinvent ourselves to avoid destroying ourselves. Maybe my schizophrenia inadvertently sling shot me ahead of most of the crowd. We are heading towards some really cool things in the future, but whether or not we as a species make a successful transition is not certain mainly because we are stumbling around without much of a plan to manage the transition.

It’s been quite quiet for me this summer. I haven’t had any flare ups or episodes. I haven’t even heard my neighbors arguing for weeks. Somedays I wonder if I even have neighbors it’s been so quiet in my complex. About the only time I see any of my neighbors is when I leave my apartment to run errands. I don’t sit outside too much anymore just because it’s been so hot. Fortunately we have only another six to eight weeks of hot weather left. But I have been enjoying the peace and quiet. I also enjoy not having flare ups or dealing with stupid and rude people all the time.

I used to have to deal with a lot of drama at work and in some friendships. I haven’t dated for several years simply because the drama and ups and downs just got old. Having schizophrenia while trying to date adds a whole another level of difficulty. And I came to the conclusion that I just don’t want to be bothered with it anymore. I have enough problems as is. I also had to cut negative people out of my life. Sure it meant ending a few friendships and being real careful about who I let into my life. And it also means much alone time. But it’s alright because the peace and quiet is worth it.

Another thing that helps me is that I am debt free. That is why I can live as a minimalist and not work. I just live on my disability pension. Right now I can budget it out that I don’t have to resort to credit cards to make it through the month. I don’t have to take a thankless and stressful job because I don’t need the money. As far as I’m concerned, the biggest reason to work for someone else is the money. Being an employee, especially in today’s ever shifting and toxic work environments, doesn’t seem to be much more than glorified serfdom. Why should any employee give loyalty to a company when the job can be taken over by machines, outsourced overseas, or just given to a younger person for lower wages? If you’re going to be an employee, it’s best to go to the highest bidder. An employer won’t look out for you. An employer doesn’t care about you either. Neither do most of your coworkers, at least that is my experience. A boss isn’t going to help you develop your career. You are on your own on that one. I can do this blog without getting paid for it because I don’t have to worry about income or paying off debts. And I absolutely love doing this blog. It doesn’t really seem like a job because it isn’t drudgery like I was used to in my working days. It feels more like a hobby that evolved into a life mission.

Since I don’t have debts and am content to live a minimalist life, I am quite free to write about what needs to be written. Life with a mental illness isn’t pretty much of the time. It is lonely, it can be frightening, it can be long bouts of depression and sadness, and sometimes I have found myself mourning over the career and lifestyle that never was because of this illness. But, having this illness made me resourceful and creative. It also made me smarter. It made me think about many things that most people never have to. It made me ask questions that most people would never think to ask.

Right now I’m dealing with a stretch where I haven’t had any real drama for months. It helps that I have been able to largely avoid toxic, negative, and stupid people. That’s no small accomplishment living in tight quarters like I do. I’m pretty content to just stay home much of the time anymore. I have gotten to where I feel naked without a good internet connection. I imagine that’s going to become more common in the next several years. I’m just ahead of the curve. And I don’t have to submit to a bad boss or bad coworkers or unreasonable customers to make money because I don’t need the money. I can get by just on my disability pension because I don’t have debts or expensive tastes. I won’t spend a hundred dollars on a pair of jeans or two hundred dollars on a pair of sneakers or buy a new iPhone every year or a different car every three years. I am content with what I have. I love being a minimalist. And that has helped me create a life with little to no drama in spite my mental illness.

Some of my critics will love to point out that I don’t have a “real job” and that I’m only able to stay alive because I am “leeching” off the taxpayers of my country. To which I respond, “Let’s see you fight through a mental illness for twenty years that no one can understand and some even deny exists and then you tell me how much of a leech and a cancer on society I am.” I have had people who I previously thought were my friends tell me I’m “wasting my life” not working some minimum wage drudgery because it’s the “useful”, “honorable”, and “manly” thing to do. I have had former friends tell me my blogging about mental illness is “a waste of time.” Needless to say such short sighted jerks I no longer keep in contact with.

Who gets to define what is honorable and useful to begin with? I don’t remember getting to vote on such ideas. By what right do now former friends get to tell me I am wasting my life and time blogging about living with a mental illness? I can illustrate what living with a mental illness is like. Many who are mentally ill are unable to articulate what living with it is like. It’s a lonely existence. It’s a turbulent existence. It is a horrible feeling knowing I will never be able to attempt to achieve my dreams. It is terrible knowing I will never have a family. It sucks knowing that through no fault of my own I’m always going to be on the fringes of society. And it scares me that I’m always going to be in poor health and probably die at a younger age than most people. The public at large needs to know what life is like for the forgotten mentally ill people. Many mentally ill people rotate in and out of jail because they aren’t getting the kind of treatment they need. Many mentally ill people are homeless and not by choice. Some, like myself, have to live on the outside of society looking in because we are not accepted by society as a whole. It can be a very dreary and dark existence. I don’t wish the ups and downs of mental illness on anyone, not even my worst enemies.

Why is paid drudge work considered honorable yet unpaid volunteer work, such as what I do with this blog, isn’t? Why do I have to work as a janitor or a convenience store clerk to “earn my keep?” As easily as we can grow food, build shelters, and harvest energy anymore, we don’t necessarily need what economists call ‘full employment.’ We don’t need several layers of bureaucracy or managers of managers or ‘inspectors of inspectors’ as Buckminister Fuller put it many years ago.

We don’t have 90 percent of our workforce on farms or factories like we did during the Industrial Revolution because we have machines and scientific processes that can grow crops and make goods far better than we could in bygone years. I am convinced that holding on the antiquated and obsolete idea that everyone has to have a job is actually hurting us as a society and holding us back as a species. Besides, when I was working I heard my coworkers and bosses complain and whine about how much they hated their jobs. It seems to me that everyone enjoys complaining about how much they hate their jobs. Hating your job, it seems to me, is more American than apple pie, the Stars and Stripes, or baseball. I never understood why normal people took pride in their misery and anger. That doesn’t seem mentally balanced at all to me.

If there is a point to this post, it’s that maybe we as developed nations should seriously consider letting machines and automation take over as much drudgery work as possible, tax the workings of said machines and automations, and just give people a regular stipend just for being citizens of a post industrial nation. Pretty much just free people up from the idea of having to have a repetitive and boring job just to eat and pay rent. These boring and repetitive jobs should have been outsourced to machines and automations a long time ago. And they will be assigned to the machines eventually. No politician can prevent the automation revolution that is already underway.

How many kids grow up dreaming of being convenience store clerks, working at Wal Mart, or working on an assembly line? No, kids grow up dreaming of being things like astronauts, artists, scientists, explorers, performers, etc. It’s when we start telling these kids they need to ‘quit dreaming’ or ‘get a real job’ that they stop striving for the stars and quit fulfilling their potential. And I think that telling these kids to kill their dreams to do something just for the money is immoral and monstrous.

In closing, the next time you hear some supposedly wise grown up tell a kid or young adult that they need to get a real job or work for money, just remember that the most important job in the world doesn’t pay a dime of money to any of it’s workers. That job is, of course, parenthood.

This summer has been anything but routine for me. I hurt my back in late May and I was out of commission for six weeks. I rarely spent any time outside and didn’t travel. I went to the park maybe three or four times in the six weeks my back was mending. Normally I go to the park three or four times per week during the summer. I haven’t done any traveling as I haven’t been outside my hometown since late May. I haven’t driven much and have actually developed a slight phobia of driving. I guess I never gained my confidence back from my accident last October. While I got my car fixed I still haven’t heard anything back from if I can get any kind of settlement. Progress is insanely slow in some cases.

I haven’t been outside around the complex much this summer. It seems that most of my neighbors have been more short tempered and irritable the last several months. I don’t know what to make of that. I still have the one neighbor who always in a foul mood and never has anything nice to say about anyone. Apparently he won’t be moving out any time soon. It’s kind of tough living in here anymore. Three of my most interesting friends in here died in 2014 and 2015. Since I live in low income housing, who we get as neighbors is luck of the draw. There are days when I’m depressed I would love to move out and start over. But I don’t think any where else in my hometown would be any better. With my mental illness and disability pension I can’t afford to move to a larger city. I don’t want to move back in with my parents as their hometown has far less to offer than my current town. I really don’t know if I can move to my brother’s hometown because of my disability pension and transferring to a different state. If I were to move to another city, I’d love for it to be to a place with reasonable public transit. I hate driving anymore. I’d never drive again if I had the choice.

I don’t suppose schizophrenics do well in large cities. I hear horror stories about people with mental illness ending up homeless or in jail in large cities. My schizophrenia being what it is, it’s not like I can start over with a job that pays enough to give me a decent living if I were to leave disability. I was anxious working as retail store clerk and factory worker. I used to have panic attacks so bad I’d vomit from the anxiety before I went to work. I fear the idea of working with the public. I have been verbally abused enough by customers and coworkers in my previous life as a customer service worker that I never want to experience that again. And blogging about mental illness will never pay the bills even if I am providing a good service for others.

It’s not the money I care about, it’s what the money can buy that I’m concerned about. I don’t need the status of a high paying job to satisfy my ego. I don’t need the large house in the suburbs or the high end penthouse in a skyscraper. I don’t need the large pickup truck or high end foreign car. I can get around just fine in a twelve year old four door sedan that is as good on gas mileage as anything besides the really small Japanese cars. If I need to move something with a pickup truck, that’s why I have friends and family members with pickup trucks. It’s amazing what one can accomplish with a phone call, a little elbow grease, and offering to buy lunch or a tank of gas.

I really have my basic material needs but I can get by with almost no splurging. I have learned to live inexpensively on my disability pension without a job. I am happy wearing t-shirts, sneakers, and pants from K-mart and Wal-Mart. I can get all the music I want for free via youtube or pandora radio. I don’t even have music CDs anymore. I haven’t even downloaded music from iTunes in over a year. I would rather watch Netflix at home, sit on my own couch, and eat a delivery pizza than go to the movie theatre. I would rather go for a walk in the park or shovel snow in the winter than spend heaven knows how much on a gym membership.

Splurging for me is grilling bratwursts and spending cool and overcast autumn Saturday afternoons watching Nebraska Husker college football games on my flat screen tv. Splurging for me is buying a bucket of KFC and a couple side dishes instead of eating off the dollar menu. When I need new furniture I talk to friends and family who are moving or having estate sales. I got my couch, lamps, and recliner after my grandfather died. I got my bed and dresser after my grandmother died. I got my house plants from helping my mother. All I had to do was help my family clean out their places for a weekend. The most I gave for a piece of furniture was $50 for my all purpose heavy duty table I eat from and use my computer on. So a person can live quite inexpensively if you use your family and friends’ connections and help people out once in awhile. The only time I go to restaurants that aren’t fast food is when I’m entertaining out of town family and friends. I have stayed out of debt for two years even without a job. I managed to save up some emergency money that could fund my life for a couple months even without a disability pension.

So I’m not concerned about getting rich. For the first few years I was serious about writing, I was hoping to make some money as a writer, travel on the speaking circuit, and donate a bunch of money to my college as some of my happiest memories are from my four and a half years at York College in York, Nebraska. Now that I know how to live on less than I thought I could and I see how much stress my brother is under with his job, I know it’s not the high paying job or successful business that I need or even want. The big thing that I want now is for my experiences and writings to make a positive difference for whomever happens to read these entires. I have no delusions I’ll make much money writing a mental illness blog. Schizophrenia my involve delusions but that’s not one of my delusions. I don’t care if I make money off my writings and blogging. I really don’t even care if I make above poverty level wages. I just want to make a positive difference in the lives of whomever reads my blogs, whether you be a mental health patient, support person, or just someone who cares about the problems of the mentally ill. I don’t desire riches. I desire to make a positive difference in at least a few lives.

I will give you a head’s up. This is going to be a serious rant. And I am going to, at least for this post, stop holding your hand and give you feel good platitudes about the life of a mentally ill individual. This is a rant that is long overdue. So here goes.

As a grown man afflicted with a severe mental illness, I readily admit I do not understand the thinking and actions of normal people. I never have, even before I became mentally ill. Seriously, there are things you normals do and complain about that seem insane to me. But since that is the norm instead of the paranoia, delusions, crippling depression,and hallucinations of schizophrenia, the complaints and senseless actions of the normal are not construed as the manifestations of mental illness.

Today I would like to discuss the world of the workplace. Ever since I was four years old and old enough to listen in on grown up conversations, I have heard adults complain ceaselessly about their jobs. I’ve heard you complain about how your boss is an idiot. I’ve heard you go on without end about how incompetent and lazy your coworkers are. I’ve heard you complain about how unreasonable and demanding your customers are. I’ve listened to you gripe about how bad government agencies and regulations are hampering your business and productivity. Since my parents were health care professionals, OSHA was one of their favorite whipping boys. I have heard you normals complain about how mind numbing and soulless your job is. And I have definitely heard about you normals complain about taxes.

Ah, taxes. Kind of appropriate so close to tax deadline here in the U.S. You complain about how you pay too much in taxes, how the rich pay too little in taxes, and I have sure heard you complain about how people on disability and unemployment don’t deserve what they get in tax payer funded programs. As if throwing these people in jail and asylums would be any cheaper. And to line the disabled up in ditches and kill them is absolutely unethical and uncivilized. I have heard you normals complain for thirty years about how bad your jobs and lives suck. I for one am absolutely sick and tired listening to you normals complain about your jobs. KNOCK IT OFF ALREADY!!! And I have to this very day never once heard even one of you idiot normals formulate a plan as to how you were going to get out debt, start that potential dream business, leave that abusive husband or codependent girlfriend, or how you were going to make sure your kids do better in their adult lives than you. You are the primary reason your life turned out the way it is. You are the reason you stayed at that dead end job in that dead end town just like four generations of your forefathers. For once in your life complain about how bad you suck and actually do something to make sure your life stops sucking. The facts are your job is lousy and your life is lousy because you settled for lousy. Stop settling, start making great plans, or shut the hell up.

I admit what I have told you is harsh. But you know what, I am harsh only because I care and love the human race and want to see us go on and keep doing cool things. We have done some pretty cool things as a species already. Cooking meat over fire, writing, the printing press, basic education for the young, fire arms, astronomy, mathematics, the steam engine, space travel, the internet, anti biotic medication, robotics, etc. We’ve done some pretty cool stuff ever since we parted ways with our monkey relatives. Having purpose and goals to strive for is what drives our species. Monkeys didn’t develop a cool civilization or make great inventions because they didn’t have any purpose or goals beyond mating, eating, and flinging manure at each other.

Having a goal and a purpose is a complete game changer. It isn’t just the brilliant scientists and engineers that need to have the purpose for their lives. I often think you normals complain about your “mundane” jobs and your current situations only because you have no goals or purpose. But your job working in a heated office or working with advanced tools on a construction site are anything but mundane. Such jobs either did not exist or were much tougher even fifty years ago. And yet here you are complaining about how bad your job sucks and your coworkers are lazy fools. Oddly, some of your coworkers would have the same complaints about you, especially if they saw you at your worst. You, for whatever reasons, killed your dreams as you tried to settle into something safe and secure. In the early 21st century, being safe and secure and not rocking the boat is death.

I never got a chance to chase my dream of being a medical research scientist. The schizophrenia killed all chance of that. Some consider me a failure or a nonhuman because I can’t work a job for my living. I hear too much of this outdated Puritanical nonsense about ‘if you don’t work, you don’t eat’ or ‘by the sweat of your brow you shall earn your bread.’ What an idiotic stance. We are now to where most of our manufacturing work can be done by machines. It won’t be the multinational sending thousands of jobs to Asia that will be an issue. Soon most manufacturing jobs (even the ones in Asia) will be done by robots. And many new technologies will replace many old style business models. Google ‘3D printing’, ‘robotics’, and ‘automation’ if you don’t believe me. There are even companies in both the U.S. and China experimenting with building inexpensive housing units entirely with gigantic 3D printers. Shoot, it won’t be long before most telemarketing and customer service call centers will be handled by computer programs. So will bookkeeping, accounting, and many insurance and finance jobs. Did those autoworkers in Detroit or steel mill workers in the Rust Belt suddenly become worthless nonhumans not deserving their daily bread because machines can do their jobs faster and more efficiently? Nope. Will the armies of customer service reps, tax preparers, bookkeepers, finance workers, and other white collar workers lose their status as human beings because they are unemployed because machines will be able to do their jobs? No. Does a man or woman only have value because they make money? Not a chance. Seriously, there are over one billion people on this planet (mainly in Africa, rural Asia, and Latin America) that live on two dollars a day or less. You couldn’t buy a Big Mac at McDonald’s for that. Are they less worthy of their lives because they don’t have much money? Certainly not. I think these people are quite resourceful and creative to stay alive on such low wages, especially the ones who don’t have debts.

A job does not give a human value. Never has and never will. Neither does the size of a person’s bank account. I know that flies in the face of generations of protestant work ethic and the mentality most Americans have in identifying themselves by what they do for money. I cringed every time I was asked ‘what do you do’ when I first meet someone. What do I do? I breathe, I sleep, I laugh, I cry, I lust, I love, I play Skyrim, I watch baseball, I hallucinate without drugs, I eat Chinese food, I write, I ask questions, I learn, and I am a great friend. But I know you want to know how much money I make so you can categorize me and rank me. But it’s quite tactless in America how much money someone has (which is odd consider how much money is revered in this country). Maybe the upcoming shakeups our civilization will experience within the next twenty years will force us to reexamine how we identify ourselves. With so many people most likely being without paying jobs because machines and computers can and will do the jobs better, we will have to stop identifying with our jobs and stop condemning those who don’t have work. We may have to take drastic actions to keep civilization from descending into chaos. Desperate hungry and homeless people don’t make rational decisions. We may even have to completely overhaul or tax and social safety net systems. We may even have to resort to the whole universal basic income to keep the economy afloat and keep civilization functioning. I love civilized life and not just because I’m bad at hunting and fishing. I believe civilization has accomplished some cool things, led to billions of people with billions of talents being born through the ages who wouldn’t have been born had civilization never happened. I want to see this thing keep going. And things won’t get better by people believing a person has value only as far as they can earn money by their jobs.

I never could figure out why there were people who flaunted their ignorance, rudeness, and stupidity. To look at some of these fools, you would think they were getting paid to be clueless and cruel. I never understood why it is that dumb is cool, smart is lame, being a jerk gets you places, and being a humanitarian is a loser’s bet. But then, I never could figure out why most people act the way they do. There are times I think those who would be considered mentally stable are the ones who actively work against their best self interests. It used to be far more frustrating than it is now.

It doesn’t bother me much now that I’ve just accepted that many people I meet are going to be stupid and mean. I really try to keep my wisdom to myself if I sense my advice will fall on deaf ears. It is tough as the intelligence finds ways to pop up at the worst times. I’ve been accused of being a ‘show off’, a ‘know it all’, and even intimidating simply because the intelligence doesn’t stay hidden for long. But it doesn’t really bother me anymore that people are going to do stupid and rude things. The outside world is messed up but I don’t have to be.

I consciously choose not to be messed up. The fact I consciously choose my actions and thoughts puts me far ahead of the bulk of humanity. I’ve seen far too many people who go thorough life just drifting along and not really examining what they can do or what they want. After much trial and error, I’ve come to the conclusion that I’ll never do well at a traditional type of job. It seems anymore that my best chances of having any kind of purpose or money that a traditional job would give people will be through something internet based. Which is fine with me as I never could stand being told what to do and how to think. I think many people with anxiety problems and social awkwardness would do well with an internet based set up.

I try not to let stupid and rude people get to me. I’m not perfect at it. But I’ve gotten to where I no longer envy or resent them. Most of the people that act stupid and rude are not interesting or thought provoking. They are not rare. I choose to be conscious of what I do and think. I choose to be different. I choose to stand out. I choose to not be stupid and rude.

Right now I am currently in one of those long periods of stability bordering on normalcy. Probably why I’ve gotten so much work on this blog done over the last couple weeks. I’m currently on a hot streak. To paraphrase Kevin Costner from ‘Bull Durham’, “when you’re on a winning streak, you don’t do anything to mess with it. Respect the win streak. They don’t come along very often.”

This overall ability to get things done and not be really phased by what problems arise is no doubt due to more than one factor. For starters, spring has always been one of my better times. Even before I had mental health problems I did my best school work, read the most, wrote the most, was the most physically active, and the most socially outgoing in the spring to early summer. Too bad I can’t bottle this positive mojo juice to carry me though tough spots and darker days.

I don’t have access to ‘hot streak on demand.’ No one does. Yet with the benefit of several years of accumulated self knowledge and experience, I can have the next best thing. I have learned how to do great deals of work during good times. I have learned how to do damage control during bad times. I have learned how to make winning streaks last longer, feel better, and more productive. I have learned things that lessen the darkness of bad spells.

The first step to sustainable productivity and happiness is knowing yourself. Knowing yourself is not knowing what you think you should be. It is knowing what you do well naturally, accepting it, and acting on it. I’ve held enough jobs to know that a happy worker isn’t always productive or an irritable one isn’t always unproductive. Vice versa is true. Some people are productive because they are Pollyanna types and some are productive because they are hard cases. One is not necessarily better than another.

What is not good is thinking you always have to be one thing at all times, especially when that one thing goes against your core nature. For myself, I know I am not naturally Mr. Social Hour. I do better at a job, or any undertaking, when I’m not chatting with others and making small talk every ten minutes. I can’t stand small talk at all. Yet because I keep silent when I work and get engrossed in problems, I am have been condemned as anti-social and a poor team player since childhood. Should it matter if I don’t comment on the weather or don’t know when my coworker’s wife is giving him a hard time? If I’m doing a good job and providing some value, it really shouldn’t matter. Likewise, I don’t take offence should a coworker or friend be too busy to talk as long as they are professional and courteous. I don’t need my ego stroked at all times. I don’t need to hold hands and play nice at all times to get my work done. I know myself well enough that I know that is not how I become productive. My core nature would rather ‘kick ass and take names’ instead of ‘kiss ass and drop names.’

Unfortunately I haven’t found many environments outside of blogging and working alone that allow me the freedom to play to my strengths. It is far easier for me to research for this blog and my own enlightenment for ten hours straight than do twenty minutes of messaging the egos of others. Most of these egos wouldn’t need messaged if these people felt free to play to their strengths more and discard what doesn’t work for them. Kind of crazy how people are usually more productive and happy when they are free to use their individual strengths. Sure there are social pressures to conform to fit certain types. Yet we aren’t happier with ourselves and others when we do and compromise our strengths and integrity.

For example, I get annoyed every time I go to my bank to buy quarters for laundry or chat with a banker and the poor clerk or personal banker has to feign interest in my day or chat me up because it’s ‘part of the job’ or it’s ‘being part of the community.’ Who cares how good or bad my weekend was? Even I don’t care sometimes. I have a hard time imagining somebody like J.P. Morgan talking about the weather with Thomas Edison or making idle chit chat with an Andrew Carnegie type when he wanted to borrow money to build a new blast furnace.

And it’s not just my bank that does this faking interest because some boss thinks it adds a personal touch. I get this practically every time I go shopping, especially at the large bookstore I shop at. Every time I go through a check out line the poor clerk is forced to take interest and comment on what I’m buying and reading. Just once I should have said, “Thank goodness I’m not buying ‘The Anarchist’s Cookbook’ or ‘Best of Letters to Penthouse.’ ” I totally know why online retailers like amazon and eBay are doing so well. Heaven help us when AI is figured out and my computer is forced to fake interest in my activities. Hopefully the computer will be intelligent enough to not fake interest because it is illogical and pointless. Having faux interest and playing nice at all times doesn’t always work and thus should be discarded.

High school graduation season is in full swing in my home state. Some times it’s tough to believe I’ve been out of high school for sixteen years. So much has happened since I became an adult. What follows is what I would tell myself if I had a time traveling DeLorean or funky booth like Dr. Who.

Dear Zach

You have just finished high school and your adult life now lays ahead of you shooting off into the unseen distance like the open highway in Jack Kerouac’s “On The Road.” You didn’t take any time to appreciate the fact you graduated from high school, looking ahead to the challenges and opportunities of college instead. You should have appreciated your time being somewhat of an outsider in your high school. First because the people that struggle socially in high school often are the ones who adapt to the adult world better. Be happy the highlight of your life wasn’t your last football game or Senior Prom. You will face far tougher issues than losing the big game. You will have greater thrills than wearing an ill fitting rented suit and dancing among tinsel and paper miche decorations in a basketball gym. Things like that will be remembered by NO ONE.

The challenges you will face in the coming years will be great and many. When these challenges and disappointments come, you will be thankful for having developed a strong mind and ability to handle adversity, loss, loneliness and pain. Because you didn’t have legions of fair weather friends, you will appreciate true friends and confidants. Because you know what it’s like to be treated poorly, you will have compassion for others. Because you didn’t allow yourself to concentrate on only academics or football or speech or your weekend retail job, you have made yourself a well rounded and well versed man. Being well rounded won’t help you in a corporate job, but it will make you more self reliant and more aware of what’s going on around you. It will make you interesting too.

I see you have your high school annuals. You’ll be happy you kept them even if you go entire years without looking at them. In coming years you will be amazed at how much you were involved, how much you accomplished, and how well prepared for college and the ‘fast times and hard knocks’ of the first several years of life in the real world. Be happy you acted in the school play for two years, you won’t have that back. Be happy you did three years of competitive speech, you developed courage and an ability to improvise, make split second decisions, and hide your fear from the outside world. Be happy you played football for three years, even though you were at odds with your teammates. Not many people can say they did athletics in high school. Millions may watch football from the stands in towns all over America on fall Friday nights, but you were part of the action. It’s the closest you’ll ever get to feeling like a rock star or Roman gladiator.

Take joy in the fact you went to a small high school. You may not have had dozens of Advanced Placement classes or a program for gifted students, but it will drive you to read and study on your own. Be grateful you were unable to disappear in the crowd when you were harassed and annoyed by other students, it forced you to face your fear because you couldn’t run away. Things like that develop courage and fortitude, running away from your problems or hiding in a clique won’t. Be happy you couldn’t spend your days reading comic books or playing D&D. Later on you’ll have friends whose only out of school activities were just that. While they are good guys, be happy you had to rely on your own imagination to develop your own stories and got to draw upon real people and real experiences to find inspiration. That, and most girls don’t find D&D and comic books fantasies very sexy.

Speaking of girls, don’t believe the nonsense you’ll date, party, and sleep around several nights a week in college. “Animal House” has nothing to do with real college. John Belusi won’t be your roommate. You can go hang out, get a little crazy, etc. at times. But you’ll be far ahead of 80 percent of your classmates when you keep things like that in moderation. The few who do nothing but study won’t have the friends or the experiences. You will be shot down and have girls stand you up even more in college than in high school. You will have bad breakups, you will have terrible dates with girls, you will be frustrated, and you will have heartaches. You will also realize that there are worse things than not having a girl in your life. When you see high school and college classmates go through divorces and unhappy marriages, you might even be grateful for loneliness.

As far as your classes go, don’t get tough on yourself for not making Dean’s List or not graduating with honors. Most people that get those honors studied easier subjects than Pre-Med or Business Management. Spoiler alert, Zach, you won’t get the dream job you gunned for all the way through high school. You will experience pains and horrors that make Dante’s “Inferno” look like an Adam Sandler comedy. I won’t go into details because you won’t believe such things could happen to someone who worked as hard and was as ethical as you. Just believe me when I say bad things happen to even good people. That and no employer will ask to see your college diploma.

Zach, be grateful for the challenges ahead. They will teach you that you don’t need a prestigious job or lots of money to live a happy and content life. You will learn the best things in life are other people and your experiences. Be happy you went to the small college you did. You got to make friends from all over America and the world. Most people that go to large, prestigious universities don’t get to have the variety of friends you will. Be happy when you get to learn early on that life isn’t about working most of your waking moments at a mind numbing job, chasing money to buy junk you don’t need to impress people who don’t care. All I will tell you is every day you wake up, be thankful if aren’t a cubicle jockey or a serf in a designer suit racking up debts on meaningless trinkets and thrills.

In closing, Zach, always remember the words of the late Bill Hicks: “It’s just a ride. And you can change it anytime you want.” Be happy that you can and will.